1. Direct imaging of Beta Pictoris b with first-light Magellan Adaptive Optics
- Author
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Derek Kopon, Katie M. Morzinski, Lorenzo Busoni, Carmelo Arcidiacono, Enrico Pinna, Alfio Puglisi, Simone Esposito, Fernando Quiros-Pacheco, Ya-Lin Wu, Victor Gasho, Timothy J. Rodigas, Armando Riccardi, Phil Hinz, Marco Xompero, Andy Skemer, Laird M. Close, Javier Argomedo, A. Uomoto, Jared R. Males, Runa Briguglio, Katherine B. Follette, and Tyson Hare
- Subjects
Physics ,Infrared ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,First light ,Astrophysics ,Exoplanet ,law.invention ,Telescope ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,Observatory ,Beta Pictoris ,Adaptive optics ,Exocomet - Abstract
MagAO is the newly-commissioned adaptive optics (AO) instrument on the Magellan Clay telescope at Las Companas Observatory, Chile. MagAO has two co-mounted science cameras: VisAO for visible-light direct and spectral-differential imaging; and Clio for near to thermal IR direct imaging, non-redundant-mask interference, and prism spectroscopy. We demonstrate MagAO's simultaneous visible and infrared AO performance via direct images of exoplanet Beta Pictoris b. The planet was detected in 5 passbands from 0.9–5μm. Here we show the infrared images; the visible observations are presented in Males et al. 2013. MagAO is the first AO system to offer good performance with extensive coverage across the O/IR spectrum and thus offers an unprecedented opportunity to study the spectral energy distributions of directly-imaged extrasolar planetary atmospheres.
- Published
- 2013
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